Cuba is dominating the news, following President Obama's announcement that he will begin to normalize relations with the island nation.
For our series This Week's Must-Read, poet and Cuban-American writer Richard Blanco turns to literature for another perspective on this story.
This Week's Must-Read
People often tell me how fascinated they are with Cuba. I'm really dying to go there before it changes, they'll say. Or else they've already been and they can't wait to tell me what a good time they had.
I used to smile politely, and brace myself for tropical-flavored cliches.
And then I read The Havana Habit by Gustavo Perez Firmat. And I learned that there's more to it than just subscribing to cliches — a lot more.
The book examines how "Cubans and things Cuban have captured the American imagination." Things like Ricky Ricardo, Fidel Castro, cigars, mojitos, rumba girdles and conga lines. As the author notes, no other Latin American country has left such an imprint on the American imagination.
But that imprint doesn't have much to do with Cuba itself. Instead the book explores the role that this island — "so near and yet so foreign" — has played in America's psychic life. He writes that Cuba represents "the realm of the senses. ... It's the place where American young men and women discover rum, rumba, and romance ... a pleasure island, an Eden for the sensually deprived." For Americans, he says, Cuba has been a "mirror and mirage: a magnified reflection of domestic anxieties as well as a beckoning oasis of otherness."
After a decades-long embargo, Americans may once again travel to Cuba. If you are one of those dying to go or eager to return, The Havana Habit explains why. It makes for a travel guide like no other, uncovering the mystique of Cuba — past, present (and future?).
Richard Blanco served as the inaugural poet of the United States in 2013. His latest book is The Prince of los Cocuyos: A Miami Childhood.
Transcript
ARUN RATH, HOST:
So it looks like more U.S. citizens are going to be able to experience Cuba firsthand in coming years, but they may find it clashes with the Cuba they had imagined. Cuban-American poet Richard Blanco has been reading about the origins of the island's mystique.
RICHARD BLANCO: People often tell me how fascinated they are with Cuba. I'm really dying to go there before it changes, they'll say. Or else, they've already been, and they can't wait to tell me what a great time they had. I used to smile politely and brace myself for tropical-flavored cliches. And then I read "The Havana Habit" by Gustavo Perez Firmat. And I've learned that there's more to it than just subscribing to cliches - a whole lot more.
The book examines how Cubans and all things Cuban have captured the American imagination - things like Ricky Ricardo, Fidel Castro, cigars, mojitos and conga lines. As the author notes, no other Latin-American country has left such an imprint on the American imagination. But actually, that imprint doesn't have much to do with Cuba itself. Instead, the book explores the role this island has played an America's psychic life.
He writes that Cuba represents the realm of the senses. It's the place where American young men and women discover rum, rumba and romance - a pleasure island, an Eden for the sensually deprived.
For Americans, he says, Cuba has been a mirror and a mirage, a magnified reflection of domestic anxieties, as well as a beckoning oasis of otherness. After decades, Americans may someday be able to travel to Cuba again. If you are one of those dying to go or eager to return, "The Havana Habit" explains why. It makes for a travel guide like no other, uncovering the mystique of Cuba - past, present and future.
RATH: The book is "The Havana Habit" by Gustavo Perez Firmat. It was recommended by Richard Blanco. You can hear my interview with Richard Blanco about his latest book, "The Prince Of Los Cocuyos" at npr.org. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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